West, who has been vocal about his support of Trump since after he was elected in 2016, shared the password to his phone (which is 000000) and announced that he had been misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder. The rapper said he was merely sleep deprived.

“Let’s stop worrying about the future, all we have is today,” he said. “Trump is on his hero’s journey right now. He might not have thought he’d have a crazy motherf**ker like (me).”

West revealed that he had made a new version of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” hat that loses the “Again” part.

WATCH BELOW: Kanye West reveals he’s made a new version of Trump’s ‘MAGA’ hat

“I would love to see, at the Super Bowl, Trump wearing a “Make America Great” hat and Colin wearing a “Make America Great” hat and showing we can bend a bit on this side, we can bend a bit on this side and we can learn to be malleable in the infinite universe that we are and the loving beings that we are,” West said.

“We aren’t a side. We are one unit. We are a country. We are one moment in history,” West said.

The I Love It rapper also said that many people believe that if someone’s black, then that person has to be a Democrat.

WATCH BELOW: Kanye West: People expect if you’re black you need to be a Democrat

The White House said that Trump and West would discuss a range of issues, including manufacturing, prison reform, preventing gang violence and reducing violence in Chicago, which is where West grew up.

Trump earlier this week called on Chicago to adopt the strategy, in which large numbers of people are temporarily detained, questioned and sometimes searched for drugs and weapons.

Trump had said that “stop-and-frisk works.”

But West told Trump that this strategy is detrimental. “We feel stop-and-frisk does not help relationships in the city,” West said.

WATCH BELOW: Kanye West: Black community needs to answer for killings as much as police do

Trump said he’d been willing to “look at it,” and saying, “They have to do something.”

Stop-and-frisk was used extensively in New York City until it was deemed unconstitutional because of its impact on minority residents. Chicago reached an agreement with the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois in 2015 to curb the practice.